Showing posts with label bleachers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bleachers. Show all posts

Friday, September 2, 2011

September 1, 2011: Red Sox vs. Yankees

Karma seems to be catching up. After not getting to go to Fenway at all for five-ish years, I have now been four times in the last year. And they've all been GREAT times: The first one was Mother's Day in 2010, where my friend Jacob, whose father has season tickets, invited me to join them for the matinee, which just so happened to feature the arch-rival New York Yankees. The Red Sox won 9-3, and the seats were phenomenal. I had a great time. The second game was the anniversary of a game my family and I had attended in 2002. May 18, 2002 we saw Pedro Martinez hurl an eight inning, nine strikeout performance against the Seattle Mariners, a Sox win. On May 18, 2011, we saw Clay Buccholz throw seven innings of no-run ball, with seven strikeouts. After a slow start to the season, the Sox were now in the middle of an (at that point) five game winning streaking, pushing their record over .500 with a 22-20 record following the game. The next game was with my girlfriend and her temple on July 27 of this year. The Red Sox faced the Kansas City Royals and won 12-5. The hit parade was led by Big Papi, who hit a grand slam, pushing him beyond the 1,00 RBI mark with the Red Sox. It was very exciting to be part of history like that.

That brings me to yesterday's game against the Yankees. Last week I got contacted by my friend Sam asking if I'd like to join him, his twin brother and younger brother to go to the game. I have been good friends with Sam, Dom and Frank for a very long time but do not get to see them as much as I would like. Being with them alone made it a great time. Yeah, the Red Sox lost, but I find myself completely capable of enjoying myself at a baseball game, even if my team does not win. What could be more fun than a Red Sox-Yankees game at Fenway Park, with seats in the bleachers? That answer, technically, is the Red Sox winning that game, but that's beside the point. The bleachers are the most fun place to sit. Sure, you're about a half mile from the action, but you're not going to find fans that are any more 'real' than those who sit in the bleachers.

I had an interesting interaction with a young man seated in the row in front of us. Derek Jeter came up to bat, and I began jeering at him, calling him overrated. The man turned around and said, "How? He's got 3,000 hits!"
"I'm not questioning his offense. Of course he can hit. It's his fielding that I'm referring to."
"He's got like a million Gold Gloves!!"
"And he deserved maybe two of them!"

The conversation petered off after that, but the situation is still laughable to me. This guy was a Red Sox fan sitting in the bleachers in a game against the hated Yankees, supporting a man that is the epitome of Yankee-dom. It was baffling. Yes, yes, I know, Derek Jeter is known as a classy dude, and is absolutely a likable guy. If I had to pick a favorite (current) Yankee, he would be third, after Rivera and Granderson. However, I still have my beliefs, that are based on facts. Facts show that Derek Jeter has one of the worst ranges of major league shortstops; bottom of the league. Yes, he does regularly end up with a pretty good fielding percentage, but the truth is that it is only so high because of his lack of range; Jeter is unable to even attempt many plays that most other shortstops can get to. These more talented shortstops are sometimes unable to make these plays cleanly, resulting in errors and a lower fielding percentage. Shortstop is one of the most difficult positions to play, so I am in no way diminishing his athletic ability; he is way more athletic than I am, and can make plays I could never dream of making. However, most of the plays he makes are routine. As his age has advanced, so has range. I'm not sure of the exact statistic, but he ranks incredibly low UZR or WAR or one of those other advanced sabremetrics. Basically, if you wanted a good defensive shortstop, you would not want Derek Jeter. Please feel free to debate me on this issue in the comments, or in person.

I left for the game with the impression that Sox had a pretty good chance to win, with AJ "I am a terrible pitcher" Burnett on the mound for New York. But, of course, Burnett decides to pitch relatively acceptably and get the win. It was probably just to spite me. Jon Lester had a rocky 40+ pitch first inning and had one of his shortest pitching outings ever, taking the loss. The Red Sox had next to no offense, safe for Pedroia's Monster Shot that put the Sox up 2-1 at that point. They did not score again, and the Yankees did, so the Sox lost.

So, the Red Sox lead in the AL East went back to 0.5 over the Yankees. As I am writing this, the Red Sox are getting pummeled by the Texas Rangers 10-0, and and Yankees appear headed towards victory. If all remains as it is now, the Sox will be down a half game after tonight. Sure, we still clearly have control of the Wild Card, but we want the division! There is less than a month of the regular season, so it's crunch time. Our offense can't keep not producing like this. I have faith, but the Red Sox need more than just my faith; they need offense and at least decent pitching. It's go time!

Please leave any comments you have. I'll post again in a week!